Let me apologize in advance, this is going to be a long post, but you've hit one of my many hot buttons.
The 1960's thinking was that a vertical meter run (down for gas) would be inherently good at separating liquids out and would prevent multi-phase complications in measurement (I suppose they thought the gas would outrun the liquid?). For liquids you wanted to flow up because many field measurement applications are flowing less than a full pipe and the "thinking" was that vertical-up would ensure that the pipe around the plate was full. Neither of these rationalizations stood up to systematic laboratory study.
The arithmetic for converting a P, dP, and T to a volume flow rate starts with Bernoulli's Equation and applies several dozen assumptions. The first is that the change in elevation term can be discarded because "tubes are always installed on the horizontal", and then doesn't require horizontal installation. For gas the density is so small that the dP due to elevation change of just over 2 inches is probably insignificant on any commercial scale, I just hate sloppy specifications.
The current AGA-3 is silent on tube orientation. I was having a discussion with a client a couple of years ago about their vertical tubes in custody transfer gas measurement. I went to some people I know on the committee and asked what the thinking was. The answer I got was that they wanted to require horizontal orientation, but the offshore lobby had kittens about the extra footprint that would be required and the latest version is totally silent on tube orientation so either horizontal or vertical tubes are allowed in the spec (that has the force of law in many circumstances). I finally had to withdraw my exception from the report I was preparing, tuck my tail firmly between my legs, and slink off. I'm still bitter about that experience.
Bottom line is that vertical tubes can be supported by the silence of the code, but they are not a good measurement practice.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
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